Would be a WHOLE lot better to get a new air tube, made for high pressures. It's not that MOST QB tubes won't handle 1250PSI, but that SOME won't...and you really can't tell which ones will have a problem by looking at them. Even if the odds are with you, it is still a gamble...so no *_*_*_*_*_*ing about losing an eye or ruining a good gun if your guessed wrong.
IF you do decide to try over 850PSI and want to use the stock QB tube, would do three things:
(1) Add two more set screws to the valve...if something is going to come lose and let high pressure gas jet out, would be better if it was at the muzzle end.

Retaining screws though QB gas tube and into the valve head, one per side. Keep them to the REAR of the o-ring that seals the valve to the gas tube, about even with the existing retaining screw (on the bottom). Thread size not real important, but 8-32 or 6-32 cap screws are easier to find than other threads. It's not that they'll back out, a touch of lock-tite will take care of that, are there to keep the valve from being forced backawards by high pressure.
(2) Change to a Delrin valve seal (believe Mounatin Air sells them if you can't make one). The issue valve seals are a little soft for constant use at this pressure.
(3) Add a RAP 4 gauged on/off between the HPA tank and the rifle.
RAP 4 on/off.

Can read the HPA tank's gauge as 2,500PSI, the gun pressure as 1250PSI (actually, it looks more like 1200PSI), and see the large brass 1.8K burst disk
The gauged on/off does several things.
1)The gauge on the on/off reads the GUN side pressure, so you'll know what the output pressure of the regulator really is. Bad news is that one HPA tank sold (not from a sponsor here) as a 1100 output blew the RAP4 gauge...that gauges goes to 1500PSI, so what the real output was is anybody's guess. That regualtor is beat to snot and in the junk box.
(2)Can store the rifle with it on "off", which makes finding leaks a bit easier...if the gun side pressure drops over night, the problem is with the gun...if the tank pressure drops over night, problem is with the HPA tank. One of the reasons HPA generates more vel. at the same pressure as co2 is becasue air is "thinner" and flows more easily....those same features usually mean it finds leaks sooner as well, so expect to hunt down a few slow leaks when you first convert to HPA.
(3) Can turn the gun to off, shoot it once, and store the rifle with 200-500PSI pressure in the rifle to seal the valves but not have to store it at full HPA pressure.
(4) The ON/OFF has 1.8K burst disk. The HPA tank regulator should have two burst disk, one on it's high pressure side (usually a 4.5K disk) and one on it's low pressure side (usually a 1.8K disk). With the on/off, have TWO 1.8K disks on the low pressure side....which might vent enough air if the HPA tank screws up and dumps all 3K at once.
The one QB running on 1250PSI is a custom .25cal (with the three mods mentioned above). On co2, it will earn 23 foot pounds. On 850HPA will earn 25.5 foot pounds. On 1250HPA, will earn 32.5 foot pounds (this would be 30.7gr. Kodiaks at 588fps / 612fps/ and 690fps).
Truth be told, nothing I've shot with the .25 could tell the difference between 25.5 foot pounds and 32.5 foot pounds and it's going to be converted back to 850PSI after a few more experiments.
The two other HPA QB's are running 850PSI, one still running fine on a stock valve stem...neither of those two have had the extra retaining screws added. No problems with them at 850PSI pressure so far.
BUT by goofing around with HPA and stock QB tubes, if I have to relearn to shoot left eye dominate becasue I blew my right eye to jello-goo, I've no one to blame but myself.
Left to right:
Standard QB78-22 with little done to it. Runs on 12gr. or bulk co2. As issued, getting 10.9 foot pounds.
Max effort QB78-25. Running on 1250PSI HPA for 32.5 foot pounds (but abpout to go back to 850PSI).
Carbine QB79 - 22. Running on 850PSI HPA without any troubles. Set for 12 foot pounds, about like a stock Benjamin with 7 or 8 pumps.
AR 2078 - /177. Set up to be slow and quiet. Running on 12gr. or bulk fill co2. gettin aboput 8.5 foot pounds.
QB78 - .20. Running on 850PSI HPA with out any trouble. Set a bit hotter than a Sherican would be, geting 15.7 foot pounds.
